| trace |
1. In general, an unmeasurable (less than 0.01 in.) quantity of precipitation. 2. An insignificantly small quantity. 3. The record made by any self-registering instrument. Thus, one may speak of the barograph trace, the hygrothermograph trace, etc.
Ãâó: amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/browse
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| trace |
a visible path created by repeated passage of animals or people
Ãâó: www.kentuckyawake.org/templates/glossary/
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| trace |
Fossil signs left behind such as footprints, nests, and burrows.
Ãâó: www.nps.gov/maca/learnhome/cur_p_glo.htm
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| trace element |
An element an animal requires in small amounts. 32
Ãâó: www.mhhe.com/biosci/genbio/life/glossaryt.mhtml
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| trace |
In hydrologic terms, a hydrograph or similar plot for an extended-range time horizon showing one of many scenarios generated through an ensemble forecast process.
Ãâó: weather.gov/glossary/glossary.php
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| trace | discover traces of |
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| trace | an element that occurs at very small quantities in the body but is nonetheless important for many biological processes |
| trace | a utility program that exhibits the sequence and results of executing the instructions in another program |
| trace | (usually followed by `to') able to be traced to |
| trace | capable of being traced or tracked |
| trace | derived by copying something else |
| trace | ammunition whose flight can be observed by a trail of smoke |
| trace | (radiology) any radioactive isotope introduced into the body to study metabolism or other biological processes |
| trace | an instrument used to make tracings |
| trace | an investigator who is employed to find missing persons or missing goods |
| trace | ammunition whose flight can be observed by a trail of smoke |
| trace | decoration consisting of an open pattern of interlacing ribs |
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